Des/Exile
Did see the commments re the declaration also thought they had erred by not giving themselves enough time especiallt when Duke and Bess were batting, give the young lad credit Duke did his county proud staggering pace from Saq at the end the ball to Thompson was a bueat as was the win
In the distance a team celebrates
LV= County Championship Group Three, Emirates Old Trafford, Manchester (day four):
Yorkshire 159 & 271: Brook 52, Bess 46, Lyth 39; Mahmood 5-47
Lancashire 509-9 dec: Bohannon 127*, Jennings 114, Lamb 61; Thompson 3-86
Lancashire (22 pts) beat Yorkshire (1 pt) by an innings and 79 runs
Lancashire secured their first County Championship win over Yorkshire at Old Trafford for 21 years as paceman Saqib Mahmood led the way with five wickets.
Yorkshire fought hard to secure a draw with some dogged resistance but victory was secured inside the last 30 minutes.
They were bowled out for 271 in their second innings to give Lancashire victory by an innings and 79 runs.
Mahmood (5-47) and Matt Parkinson (3-61) were the pick of a bowlers as the hosts' persistence was rewarded.
Mahmood's first five-wicket haul for Lancashire was the key to a fourth win in seven matches which stretches their lead at the top of Group Three to 24 points.
Second-placed Yorkshire's first defeat of the campaign leaves them only two points ahead of third-placed Northamptonshire, who earlier beat Sussex by seven wickets.
The Tykes had resumed the final day on 85-2, still 265 runs shy of making Lancashire bat again. Their chances of a draw looked even more improbable after Mahmood bowled both Will Fraine (6) and nightwatchman Steven Patterson (8) early in the morning session to reduce them to 92-4.
But a determined fifth-wicket partnership of 59 between George Hill (18) and Harry Brook (52) kept Lancashire at bay until after lunch when Tom Bailey bowled Hill with the fourth delivery with the second new ball.
Brook was the only other wicket to fall in the afternoon session as spinner Parkinson trapped him leg before.
Yorkshire's lower-order grittiness continued into the last hour of play thanks to Harry Duke (29) and Dom Bess (46) sharing a 58-run stand for the seventh-wicket.
Luke Wood managed to get a ball to nip back and clip Duke's bails when he offered no shot and that seemed to pave the way for a swift conclusion.
But Jordan Thompson (14) also proved equally tough to remove until Mahmood had both him and Ben Coad caught behind in consecutive overs before Parkinson won it when Bess edged to Liam Livingstone at slip five balls later.
Lancashire fast bowler Saqib Mahmood told BBC Radio Lancashire:
"Possibly the best feeling I've had on a cricket field. My throat's gone after the end there.
"We said at tea that we've been in that sort of position twice already this season and we had to just keep grafting hard for wickets right to the end.
"Having the crowd back in definitely helped us. I was really tired going into that last spell and then suddenly, you pick up a wicket and the crowd picks you up and you don't feel tired any more.
"It was a great team effort. Everyone stuck to their roles and contributed throughout the four days. To take five wickets in a Roses match makes it even more special."